A treatise on arithmetic. [With] Key, Volum 11880 |
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Side v
... original text than other editors would have been entitled to take . Con- siderable changes and additional explanations have been introduced by Professor James Thomson in the earlier chapters of the work , up to Discount . Several of the ...
... original text than other editors would have been entitled to take . Con- siderable changes and additional explanations have been introduced by Professor James Thomson in the earlier chapters of the work , up to Discount . Several of the ...
Side 25
... original value one hun- dredfold ; and so on . Thus , the figure 7 , with one cipher annexed , expresses seventy , or ten times 7 ; with two ciphers , seven hundred , or 100 times 7 , & c . In like manner , if to 24 we annex a cipher ...
... original value one hun- dredfold ; and so on . Thus , the figure 7 , with one cipher annexed , expresses seventy , or ten times 7 ; with two ciphers , seven hundred , or 100 times 7 , & c . In like manner , if to 24 we annex a cipher ...
Side 27
... original value one hun- dredfold ; and so on . Thus , the figure 7 , with one cipher annexed , expresses seventy , or ten times 7 ; with two ciphers , seven hundred , or 100 times 7 , & c . In like manner , if to 24 we annex a cipher ...
... original value one hun- dredfold ; and so on . Thus , the figure 7 , with one cipher annexed , expresses seventy , or ten times 7 ; with two ciphers , seven hundred , or 100 times 7 , & c . In like manner , if to 24 we annex a cipher ...
Side 29
... original multiplication as its final excess . Then the product of the two excesses , 6 and 8 , is 48 , the sum of the digits in which is 12 , which again has the sum of its digits 3 ; that is to say , its excess above 9 is 3 , the same ...
... original multiplication as its final excess . Then the product of the two excesses , 6 and 8 , is 48 , the sum of the digits in which is 12 , which again has the sum of its digits 3 ; that is to say , its excess above 9 is 3 , the same ...
Side 32
... original heap . Then count how many of these lots there are , or , in other words , how often 3 is contained in 15. From the frequent use of pebbles among the ancients , as counters for the performance of arithmetical operations , the ...
... original heap . Then count how many of these lots there are , or , in other words , how often 3 is contained in 15. From the frequent use of pebbles among the ancients , as counters for the performance of arithmetical operations , the ...
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12 yards acres amount annexed annuity annum Answ answer arithmetic avoirdupois called ciphers column common multiple compound interest contained continued fraction cost crown 8vo cube cubic denominator denote diameter divide dividend division divisor English equal equation equivalent Exam example Exer Exercises explanations farthings feet find the price fourth gallons given fraction given number given rate greater Hence hundred improper fraction inches integral least common multiple length lower terms manner means method miles millions minuend mode multiplicand multiply nearly notation number of pounds number of terms obtained operation ounce pence perches present value present worth principle proceed proportion proposition pupil quotient ratio ratio-equation Reduce remainder required to find result root RULE Rule II sheep shillings square subtract taken third terms thousand tion troy weight unit weight whole number word
Populære avsnitt
Side 54 - OF TIME. 60 Seconds = 1 Minute 60 Minutes = 1 Hour 24 Hours = 1 Day 7 Days = 1 Week 28 Days = 1 Lunar Month...
Side 316 - A circle is a plane figure contained by one line, which is called the circumference, and is such, that all straight lines drawn from a certain point within the figure to the circumference are equal to one another.
Side 42 - An improper fraction is one whose numerator is equal to, or greater than its denominator ; as, $, -f . A mixed number is a whole number and a fraction expressed together; as, 4f, 25-ht.
Side 135 - To reduce an improper fraction to a whole or mixed number, Divide the numerator by the denominator. The quotient will be the whole number, and the remainder, if there be any...
Side 14 - This is no denial of the mathematical proposition that the whole is equal to the sum of all its parts...
Side 136 - To reduce a mixed number to an improper fraction. Multiply the whole number by the denominator of the fraction, and to the product add the given numerator.
Side 319 - To find the area of a triangle. Multiply the base by the perpendicular height, and...
Side 312 - ... the ratio of the mass of a given volume of the substance to the mass of an equal volume of water, in which case it is equal to the specific gravity. In its application to gases, the term